Jesse Helms and ‘a certain vision’ of civil rights

Following up on an item from Friday, former Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), arguably the last proud, unrepentant racist on the national political scene, died at age 86, prompting an outpouring of support from his conservative allies.

The National Review published its editorial on Helms’ death today, labeling him “a true American patriot,” and questioning why everyone wants to raise a fuss about his opposition to civil rights.

One of the things he was against in the 1960s was, alas, civil rights. His defense of segregation was of course deeply misguided. But is it fair for this error to have been placed in the first sentence of the New York Times’s obituary of him? Certainly liberals have forgiven the pasts of other segregationists, from Sam Ervin to William Fulbright.

Helms’s real offense was a stubborn and victory-making political incorrectness. In 1990, he was running for reelection against Harvey Gantt, a black former mayor of Charlotte. As with many of Helms’s elections, this one was tight. His campaign ran a television advertisement about Gantt’s support for racial preferences in employment and college admissions. It pointed out that these preferences unfairly cost white applicants jobs. Merely pointing out that they cost whites jobs, let alone unfairly, was too much for liberals, who called the ad, and not the policies it addressed, racially divisive.

Given his past, Helms may not have been the best advocate for a message of colorblind equal opportunity, but he was never one to shy away from a fight. Did Helms “oppose civil rights,” as the Times put it? Actually, the Senator No of 1990 merely opposed a certain vision of them.

I swear I’m not making this up. If you don’t believe me, go ahead and click the link. Jesse Helms, the National Review argued, didn’t “oppose civil rights,” he “merely opposed a certain vision of them.”

And just to make this farce truly hysterical, National Review added, “Instead of thinking about what Senator No was against, it might be better to remember what Jesse Helms stood for: freedom for oppressed people around the globe.”

There’s no indication that the editorial board was kidding.

Now, it’s possible that the National Review is only passively troubled by Helms’ record on race given its own humiliating background. This is a magazine, after all, that lined up in 1955 “squarely behind Southern segregationists, saying Southern whites had the right to impose their ideas on blacks who were as yet culturally and politically inferior to them.”

Given this, perhaps it’s predictable that National Review would spin Helms’ — and its own — past as simply preferring an alternative vision of civil rights. You know, the one where one group of people get to deny basic human equality to another group of people based on skin color.

Yes, Helms opposed “a certain vision” of civil rights — preferring a vision in which black people had no civil rights.

National Review would prefer that we not mention or belabor this. Too bad. Helms’ legacy is one of hate, segregation, and white supremacy. His name should be an embarrassment to the conservative movement that looks to him as a leader. To call anyone who devoted his life to making millions of Americans second-class citizens in their own country a “true American patriot” is to pervert the meaning of American patriotism.

National Review’s editorial is more than just cringe-inducing; it’s a reflection of a bankrupt worldview. As Jonathan Chait noted, “[I]t would be one thing if conservatives celebrated the things they liked about Helms’ life while disavowing his bigotry. But their unalloyed celebration of Helms is a staggering indictment of movement conservatism’s views on race.”

Perhaps National Review’s editors can take a moment to consider this rather devastating item by hilzoy on Helms’ own remarks on matters of race, and then consider whether this impenitent white supremacist deserves to be called a “true American patriot.”

The Washington Post today has an editorial that is about as bad. It lists all the great accomplishments of one Senator Jessie Helms. Strangely, they can only be regarded as ‘great’ if your a wingnut conservative.

  • Given that the National Review was founded and owned for most of its existence by a conservative Catholic and is now neocon central, it’s deeply ironic they didn’t mention Helms’ anti-Catholicism and Semitism, along that of his many friends on the Concerned Citizens’ Committees, formerly White Citizens’ Committees, throughout the South.

  • I keep reading people in the lefty blogs say things like “my parents always taught me that you should never speak ill of the dead,” or variations thereof.
    Therefore, I’m sure I speak for many of these circumspect people when I say that I’m glad the old racist chicken-fucker is dead, and I’m only sorry that it didn’t happen thirty or more years ago. The planet is richer for his loss.

  • I keep reading people in the lefty blogs say things like “my parents always taught me that you should never speak ill of the dead,” or variations thereof.
    Therefore, I’m sure I speak for many of these circumspect people when I say that I’m glad the old racist chicken-f*cker is dead, and I’m only sorry that it didn’t happen thirty or more years ago. The planet is richer for his loss.

  • The man is a shameful example of racism at its worst. I wouldn’t dignify him by pissing on his grave. He stands as an example of everything this country stands against and his support from today’s conservatives should demonstrate the need to eliminate everyone of them from government service.

    He died on the 4th of July as an example of why we celebrate the fourth as freedom from his type of stain on civil liberties. How ghastly conservatives have become to actually celebrate this pig as some sort of American patriot. Totally disgusting human being representative.

  • There is no spoon.

    Nor is there truth to come from the National Review. They live in their own alternate reality (remember, a lie thrice told…and their lies are repeated so many times they have become truth, untruth, truth many times over. Hey, that’s where McCain gets his flip flops from! If you say it three times either way – both ways[!], you’re covered!)

  • I agree with Lance @ #1. When I read this in the WP this morning I cringed. Ostensibly its aim was to cast Helms in a positive light, but instead took my already very, very low opinion of him and took it down yet a few more notches.

  • It was a pretty hideous little editorial in the WaPo wasn’t it.

    Can you imagine the sick little mind that cobbled together that list of ‘achievements’ and thought “Wow!, I’ve really made Helms look good, didn’t I?”

    Brrr

  • Certainly liberals have forgiven the pasts of other segregationists, from Sam Ervin to William Fulbright.

    As a Chistian, I am a forgiving person.

    However, Jesus said “Go and sin no more.”

    If Jesse Helms had ever said what Bill Buckley of the National Review said then, of course, I would forgive him. WFB said about civil rights “I WAS WRONG.”

    Did Jesse Helms ever say he was wrong?

    Robert Byrd of the KKK has said that joining the KKK was the biggest mistake of his life.

    Helms said ……

  • But is it fair for this error to have been placed in the first sentence of the New York Times’s obituary of him?

    Certainly liberals have forgiven the pasts of other segregationists, from Sam Ervin to William Fulbright.

    Perhaps because they, unlike Helms, actually apologized for their racism, admitting they were tragically wrong and asking for forgiveness.

    Helms never did any such thing. Instead, he shifted his hatred and bigotry from those with darker skin to the gay community. Same stupidity, different target. So no … he gets no forgiveness.

  • Whoops …

    My thoughts @14 begin with “Perhaps because … ” The rest is the quote from Crazy Review.

    Hate it when I forget to close a quote tag.

  • …and I’m only sorry that it didn’t happen thirty or more years ago. -Dr. Zoidberg

    Personally, I’d rather people with similar opinions to Sen. Helms wait until January 20, 2009 before they kick the bucket.

  • Helms was a lying, vicious piece of filth and the world is a better place without him. While I am not a believer, I take some comfort in knowing that if the believers are right, Helms is now suffering in Hell for all the callousness, bigotry and evil he visited upon his fellow man.

    Burn, Jesse, burn. I’ll bring the marshmallows.

  • But.. but..but.. at least he wasn’t a flip-flopper. He had a vision & stuck to it!
    I just wish that he would have lived to see Obama elected President, heh heh.
    I just think that he’s somewhere down there…not really smiling up at us.

  • In the Next National Review: Adolf Hitler: Hey, At Least he made The Trains Run On Time.

    But remember, I’m not a real progressive, and I don’t know what I’m talking about.

  • When you live in an unreal world, everything has a different meaning. Thus seeing Helms as a ‘true patriot’ is an accurate statement for those who see an America run by a Rethug aristocracy for the benefit of Rethug corporations. It makes perfect sense.

    There are two different realities extant in America today , and they cannot coexist. For the past seven years the dark side has dominated. Perhaps there is light at the end of the tunnel now. But I’m not holding my breath.

  • I worked for the Harvey Gant campagin in 1990 and myself, like those around me will never forget the infamous commercial. It was the 11th hour and all the pundits had tagged the race a toss-up.

    The ad in question pictured a weathered white hand reaching for a crumpled paycheck (clearly aimed at the down east farmers). At the last second a black hand enters the frame and steals the paycheck!!

    Jesse Helms was a racist pig – period. He should not be eulogized for anything otherwise…

  • Hey Joe, I did too! O how I’ll never forget that horrrrible night when we lost and that “no joy in Mudville tonight” speech.

    It was an awful awful time to be a North Carolinian 🙁

  • neocons in general (& crazy old coots like Helms in particular) have a love-hate relationship with America. In order to prove they love America, they have to hate most Americans. And if you don’t hate who they hate, then obviously, you don’t love America.

    Outside of the jaw-dropping eulogies of the “Jesse we hardly knew ye but what we knew we loved” ilk, a lot of the media is making the argument that all the hate he spewed should be forgiven because he loved his country. Ironically, if a liberal who loved America but hated Helms were to die, I doubt they’d b afforded the same luxury.

    But remember, I’m not a real progressive, and as a result, I don’t know what I’m talking about.

  • So glad he is finally gone and he should have gone sooner. I had the same feelings about Jerry Falwell.

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